Eupatorus siamensis, Laporte, 1867
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4966.1.3 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:46D38C71-E302-40C6-A8C8-B48DE2598054 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4791245 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FC0187F3-FFA2-FF86-70FD-2B8BFD16B9F1 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Eupatorus siamensis |
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Eupatorus siamensis species-group
Eupatorus siamensis ( Laporte, 1867) , Eupatorus birmanicus Arrow, 1908 , Eupatorus endoi Nagai, 1999 , and Eupatorus pyros Prandi & Grossi , new species
The present study supports the recognition of the Eupatorus siamensis species-group, which is characterized by the pronotal disc bearing two horns. We do not follow Shimizu’s arrangement (2020) with the use of Alcidosoma as a valid subgenus, but we recognize the need to isolate a group of species within the other Eupatorus . Eupatorus birmanicus and E. siamensis are very similar in the external appearance, mainly in hypotelic males (the bifid male in Arrow’s description for E. birmanicus and the ab. bifidus Endrődi, 1957 for E. siamensis ). Here we illustrate the two major male habitus ( Fig.1B View FIGURES 1 and Fig. 4C View FIGURES 4 ) and the two hypotelic male habitus ( Figs 5D, E View FIGURES 5 ). In E. birmanicus the TL varies from 38 to 70 mm and the area of distribution ranges from Myanmar to Thailand. In E. siamensis the TL varies from 45 to 78 mm and the area of distribution ranges from Myanmar to Vietnam. Also, Eupatorus endoi Nagai, 1999 has a two-horned pronotal disc ( Fig. 4D View FIGURES 4 ) and sometimes displays a bifurcate apex in cephalic horn ( Fig. 5B View FIGURES 5 ). Smaller than the formers (its TL ranges from 33 to 55 mm), it is known from the typical locality of Bao Loc and other localities in southern Vietnam ( Figs 4B, D View FIGURES 4 ).
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